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Spotlight on Research

Roy N. Alcalay, M.D.

Roy N. Alcalay, M.D.

"Why do some people who carry genetic mutations associated with Parkinson’s disease (PD) never develop PD while others do?" asks Roy N. Alcalay, M.D., a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Other Movement Disorders...

Learn more about Dr. Alcalay's research

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Neurological diseases detected in the Lille Multidisciplinary Falls Consultation.

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Rev Neurol (Paris) 2009 Jul;

Authors: A Guillochon, C Crinquette, C Gaxatte, V Pardessus, S Bombois, V Deramecourt, E Boulanger, F Puisieux

Pôle de gérontologie, hôpital gériatrique Les Bateliers, CHRU de Lille, 23, rue des Bateliers, 59037 Lille cedex, France.

BACKGROUND: People with neurological disorders including stroke, dementia, Parkinson's disease, and polyneuropathy are known to have an increased risk of falls. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the prevalence and nature of neurological risk factors among the patients attending the Multidisciplinary Falls Consultation of the University Hospital of Lille (France), and to analyze the characteristic features of patients termed "neurological fallers" with neurological risk factors. METHODS: The study included 266 consecutive patients who were initially assessed by a geriatrician, a neurologist and a physiatrist, and again, six months later, by the same geriatrician. RESULTS: Two out of three patients had neurological signs that can be regarded as neurological risk factors of falling. These neurological signs had not been diagnosed before the consultation in 85% of cases. The most common conditions were deficit of lower extremity proprioception (59% of patients) and cognitive impairment (43%). The most frequently evoked neurological diseases were dementia (40% of patients), polyneuropathy (17%) and stroke (8%). Compared with other patients, "neurological fallers" were more frequently living in a nursing home, had lower ADL and MMSE scores at baseline, had experienced more falls in the six preceding months, had a lower probability of having a timed Up-and-Go test less than 20seconds and a single limb stance equal to 5seconds. In the follow-up, "neurological fallers" reported hospitalizations more often. CONCLUSION: The findings show that a large proportion of old persons presenting at the Multidisciplinary Falls Consultation have unrecognized neurological disorders. Comprehensive neurological examination including an evaluation of cognition is required in every elderly faller.

PMID: 19616814 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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